Outsourcing tax return preparation: how the process works and what to weigh

- Outsourcing tax return preparation means handing the data entry, return drafting, and review prep to an external team while your firm keeps sign-off and client contact.
- Accounting firms turn to it mainly for capacity during filing season, not just cost; a shrinking talent pipeline is the bigger driver.
- Compliance is non-negotiable: any preparer touching US returns needs a PTIN, and the firm of record stays liable for data security.
- Vet providers on security certifications, software fit, turnaround during peak weeks, and how review is structured before you sign.
Outsourcing tax return preparation is the practice of contracting an external team to handle the mechanical work of preparing returns, while the licensed firm retains review, client relationships, and final filing authority.
The arrangement spread quickly through accounting practices that hit a wall every March and April: too many returns, not enough qualified staff.
It applies to solo CPAs farming out overflow and to companies that want their own returns prepared without building an in-house tax function. The work splits cleanly because preparation and sign-off are separate steps, and only the second one requires the firm’s credential.
Why firms are outsourcing tax return preparation now
The shift is less about hourly rates than about who is left to do the work. The accounting workforce is aging out faster than it is being replaced.
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics projects about 124,200 openings for accountants and auditors each year through 2034, many of them driven by retirements and people leaving the field. Fewer graduates are entering the pipeline to fill those seats.
For a tax practice, that math turns every busy season into a scramble.
Outsourcing answers the capacity problem without permanent payroll. A firm can route a hundred extra individual returns to a provider in February and scale back to zero in May. That elasticity is the real product.
Cost savings are a side benefit, not the headline, though they are substantial when the work moves offshore.
How the outsourcing tax return preparation process works
The workflow is more structured than “send files, get returns back.” A typical engagement moves through defined handoffs that protect both quality and client data.
1. Document collection and intake
The firm gathers source documents from clients and uploads them to a secure portal the provider can access. Standardizing intake here prevents the back-and-forth that eats time later.
2. Data entry and return drafting
The external preparer enters figures into the firm’s tax software and drafts the return. Most providers work directly inside your software environment, so the file never leaves your system in a foreign format.
3. Review and quality checks
A senior preparer or the provider’s internal reviewer flags inconsistencies, missing forms, and obvious errors before the file goes back. This catches the routine mistakes so your in-house reviewer focuses on judgment calls.
4. Firm sign-off and filing
The licensed firm reviews the drafted return, makes final decisions, signs, and files. This step stays in-house by design, because the credential and the liability sit with the firm of record.
Compliance and data security in outsourced tax return preparation
This is where shortcuts get expensive. Tax returns carry Social Security numbers, income detail, and bank information, and the regulatory burden does not transfer to the vendor.
Anyone who prepares or assists in preparing federal returns for compensation must hold a valid Preparer Tax Identification Number from the IRS, and that applies to offshore staff doing the data entry, not only the person who signs.
Under the FTC Safeguards Rule, the firm is treated as a financial institution and must maintain a written information security plan covering every party that touches client data, including a provider.
Two practical implications follow. First, confirm the provider’s preparers carry valid PTINs and that the contract names the firm’s security obligations.
Second, ask whether the provider holds an independent security certification such as ISO 27001 or a SOC 2 report, and whether data stays encrypted in transit and at rest. A vague “we take security seriously” is not an answer.
Onshore vs offshore tax return preparation
Most decisions come down to where the work is done, which shapes cost, turnaround, and how you handle data residency. The comparison below sketches the trade-offs.
| Factor | Onshore (domestic) | Offshore (e.g., India, Philippines) |
|---|---|---|
| Cost per return | Higher | 40-60% lower |
| Time-zone overlap | Full | Limited; enables overnight turnaround |
| Talent pool | Tight, shrinking | Large, tax-trained on US returns |
| Data residency | Stays in country | Crosses borders; needs contractual controls |
| Best fit | Sensitive or complex returns | High-volume routine returns |
Offshore providers built around US tax work, especially in India, have trained large benches specifically on Form 1040 and 1120 preparation.
Firms that want to weigh location economics in more detail can read OA’s breakdown of outsourcing tax preparation in India, and those benchmarking spend should compare against the average cost of tax preparation by a CPA.
How to choose a tax return preparation provider
Picking a partner is closer to hiring than buying software, so vet accordingly. The questions that matter cluster around four areas.
- Security posture. Certifications, encryption standards, access controls, and named compliance ownership in the contract.
- Software fit. Whether the provider works inside your tax software or forces a clumsy import-export loop.
- Peak-season capacity. Guaranteed turnaround times in the weeks when you actually need them, not the quiet months.
- Review structure. How many eyes hit a return before it returns to you, and who carries professional credentials.
A short paid pilot during a low-volume stretch tells you more than any sales deck. OA’s broader overview of outsourcing tax preparation is a useful primer before you start shortlisting.
Frequently asked questions about outsourcing tax return preparation
Common questions from firms and businesses weighing the move.
Is outsourcing tax return preparation legal?
Yes. It is a standard practice across the accounting profession, provided every preparer holds a valid PTIN and the firm meets its data-security obligations under the FTC Safeguards Rule.
Who signs the return when preparation is outsourced?
The licensed firm of record signs and files. The provider drafts the return; the credentialed firm retains review and final authority, so liability does not shift to the vendor.
How much does outsourced tax return preparation cost?
Pricing runs per return or by hourly bench rate. Offshore work commonly lands 40-60% below domestic rates, though complex returns and onshore engagements cost more.
Do clients need to be told their returns are prepared offshore?
Best practice, and in some jurisdictions a requirement, is to disclose that a third party assists with preparation and to obtain consent before sharing taxpayer data with a provider.
Key takeaways
Outsourcing tax return preparation works when the engagement is structured and the compliance basics hold.
- Treat it as a capacity strategy first; the talent shortage, not price, is what pushes most firms to outsource.
- Keep sign-off and filing in-house, where the credential and liability belong.
- Confirm PTINs, security certifications, and contractual data-protection terms before any client data moves.
- Run a low-season pilot to test turnaround and review quality before committing to peak weeks.







Independent




